If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

But if you go to the game you get to see Antonio Brown after a loss, smiling and yucking it up and exchanging jerseys with AJ Green.

He exchanged a jersey with Calvin Johnson after a win, so why not a loss. Every team/player and coaches are good sportsman with the exception of the Ravens Hairball/, Pats/ Bill and the other Hairball. We as fans are the poor sports.

and it won't be if the team plays like crap, it will be because of the number of Bengals fans that Steelers fans allowed inside of Heinz. Sorry to say, but our once greatest fan base in the league is no more.

Being a fan is supporting your team, win or lose.

Before you rush to judge, fans have a whole host of reasons for not attending a game. I have tickets for Sunday and I'm not going to attend. If not driving across the state when they are calling for snow and sitting outside for 3+ hours while I'm sick makes me less of a fan in your eyes, so be it.

There are socioeconomic changes occurring in the Burgh that are changing the constitution of fans that go to the game.

Since the mills closed in the 70's and 80's the city had been fairly depressed. For many people the only thing that kept our city positive through this depression was our blue collar heritage and championship history. Even during the 80's when the Steelers were playing poorly and the weather was atrocious many Pittsburghers preferred watching sub-par Steelers teams than facing the realities on the homefront.

I would say beginning in the mid 2000s Pittsburgh became competitive in attracting high paying tech jobs to the region and many of those people who took those jobs were boomerang Pittsburghers moving back home. On average, these workers have higher incomes than Pittsburghers who stayed and therefore drive the pricing for sporting events. Also, on average these people are not as connected to the blue collar heritage that Pittsburgh is synonomys for. They have no problem skipping a Steelers game if it really doesn't mean anything and the weather is not great.

The game has been yupified. The play on the field is softer and so are the fans. It's a reality that I have mixed feelings about because I grew up in the burgh and would like to return someday with a high paying job. First thing I would do is get some season tickets. Personally, I would give the tickets to my family if I could not make it to a game. No way would I sell tickets blindly. That's something that B-more fans do..lol! We have to realize that we on this board represent the top 1% of Steelers fans. Good, Bad, we will always be here posting away on these boards. It's just our thing.

I would go to every game if I lived in Pittsburgh and had season tickets.

However, its hard to warrant taking time off of work & paying over $1,000/person to fly to Pittsburgh, Buy Tickets, Hotel Rooms, Food/Drinks, etc for a team that is underperforming and continues to choke in games.

i think its funny how some fans criticize others for not going. unless they attend every game, they have no room to talk. as far as the season ticket holders not going. they already contributed their money to help their team stay competitive when they bought those tickets in the spring. what have the complainers done?